'It's going to take the community': Yukon faces Canada's worst toxic drug death rate

People march from the RCMP headquarters to the Kwanlin Dun Cultural Centre to raise awareness of the Yukon overdose crisis in Whitehorse on Wednesday, March 22, 2023. First Nations from around the territory held marches and lit sacred fires following the First Nation of Nacho Nyak Dun's state of emergency declaration over the opioid crisis and two murders in the community. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Crystal Schick

When the doors close at night at the administration office at Yukon’s Carcross Tagish First Nation, a van hits the road and drives through the communities to offer naloxone to reverse overdoses, drug testing kits, food and even a friendly face to help those struggling because of the opioid crisis.

The nation's director of health and wellness, Stacey Robinson-Brown, said the new outreach van — a common tool in larger ºÃÉ«tv urban centres — is run three days a week to get more "boots on the ground" after-hours and connect with people who might need support in the communities with a population of just over 700 people.

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